In a random dot stereogram (RDS), object surfaces in a three-dimensional scene are generated by images presented to left and right eyes that comprise interocularly corresponding random black and white dots. The spatial disparities between the corresponding dots determine the depth of the object surfaces. When a black dot in one monocular image corresponds to a (contrast-polarity reversed) white dot in the other, the RDS is called anti-correlated. Neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) respond to such RDSs as if their preferred disparities become non-proferred and vice versa, thereby reversing the disparity signs reported to higher visual areas. Humans can perceive such reversed depths in peripheral but not in central vision (Zhaoping & A...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
This work was supported by the School of Psychology, University of St Andrews.One of the greatest ch...
Recent physiological observations in which stimuli with opposite contrast signs in the two eyes have...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), depth percepts of object surfaces are generated using left-eye and...
In a random-dot stereogram, the percept of object surfaces in a three-dimensional scene is generated...
In contrast-reversed random-dot stereograms (CRRDSs), a black dot in one eye matches a white dot in ...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), the percept of object surfaces in a three-dimensional scene is gen...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), the spatial disparities between the interocularly corresponding bl...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), depth is by images presented to left and right eyes that comprise ...
Information bottleneck limits feedforward signals from the primary visual cortex (V1) to higher brai...
Abstract The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
This work was supported by the School of Psychology, University of St Andrews.One of the greatest ch...
Recent physiological observations in which stimuli with opposite contrast signs in the two eyes have...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), depth percepts of object surfaces are generated using left-eye and...
In a random-dot stereogram, the percept of object surfaces in a three-dimensional scene is generated...
In contrast-reversed random-dot stereograms (CRRDSs), a black dot in one eye matches a white dot in ...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), the percept of object surfaces in a three-dimensional scene is gen...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), the spatial disparities between the interocularly corresponding bl...
In a random-dot stereogram (RDS), depth is by images presented to left and right eyes that comprise ...
Information bottleneck limits feedforward signals from the primary visual cortex (V1) to higher brai...
Abstract The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
One of the greatest challenges in visual neuroscience is that of linking neural activity with percep...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
This work was supported by the School of Psychology, University of St Andrews.One of the greatest ch...
Recent physiological observations in which stimuli with opposite contrast signs in the two eyes have...